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Joyce's "Ulysses" for Everyone, Or How to Skip Reading It the First Time 

http://www.grossmont.edu/stephanie.mood/UlyssesForEveryone.htm

As the title suggests, John Mood's book offers a very refreshing change from a sometimes over-meticulous and over-serious scholarly perspective. The author takes a step back and talks with unusual passion about what he considers "the funniest, sexiest and most exciting novel ever written". Mood's book is especially suitable for those who say "yes i said yes i will finish reading this book".

Flying over Ulysses 

http://home.adelphia.net/~hbjames/Intro_to_Ulysses.htm

Robert M. Adams discusses briefly each chapter of Ulysses, thus giving first insight into the varieties of motifs, styles, homeric parallels etc. This is an excerpt of the third chapter of his book "James Joyce: Common Sense and Beyond". Though worthwhile reading, the article is graphically and technically poorly adapted for the web (or is it just my browser's fault?).



Haveth Versions Everywhere 

http://members.tripod.com/%7Efn0rd/Joyce.htm

Daniel Klyn's interesting overview of the overcomplicated publication history of Ulysses, with a sideview at the Joyce wars. Attention: Popups.


The Joyce Industrial Evolution, According to one European Amateur 

http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/journals/jml/mod22-2.html

Fritz Senn's lovely article on the development of the James Joyce Foundation, initiated on Bloomsday 1967, and the the first Joyce Symposia.